Sir Philip Sidney
Sir Philip Sidney1554–158616th century Sir Philip Sidney was an English poet, courtier, scholar and soldier who is remembered as one of the most prominent figures of the Elizabethan age.
Poems
140 poems- 12 KING ALFRED'S40 lines
- 14 KING ALFRED'S40 lines
- 20 KING ALFRED'S40 lines
- 22 KING ALFRED'S40 lines
- 30 ROGER ASCHAM40 lines
- 32 ROGER ASCHAM19 lines
- 34 ROGER ASCHAM39 lines
- 36 ROGER ASCHAM40 lines
- 38 ROGER ASCHAM40 lines
- 4 KING ALFRED'S40 lines
- 40 ROGER ASCHAM40 lines
- 42 ROGER ASCHAM24 lines
- 44 ROGER ASCHAM40 lines
- 46 ROGER ASCHAM40 lines
- 48 ROGER ASCHAM40 lines
- 52 ROGER ASCHAM5 lines
- 6 KING ALFRED'S40 lines
- 8 KING ALFRED'S40 lines
- About our young colt's Neck.5 lines
- Above an Hour or so.5 lines
- Against Fruition8 lines
- ALFRED THE GREAT30 lines
- And are not spent a Whit.5 lines
- And did command in Chief.7 lines
- And ev'ry Man wish'd his.5 lines
- And faith fair scorn doth gain.12 lines
- And have our Loves enjoy'd.5 lines
- And that Love's Form that's now in Fashion.5 lines
- And to love true6 lines
- Astrophel and Stella VII: WhenNature Made her Chief Work14 lines
- ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.17 lines
- B240 lines
- Ballad on a Wedding5 lines
- Be it at Wake or Fair.6 lines
- BOETHIUS 1 581 lines
- BOETHIUS 1340 lines
- BOETHIUS 1782 lines
- BOETHIUS 1940 lines
- BOETHIUS 2141 lines
- BOETHIUS 2323 lines
- BOETHIUS 540 lines
- BOETHIUS 740 lines
- BOETHIUS 982 lines
- BOETHIUS II40 lines
- But he was too closely connected with Stella's81 lines
- But wot you what ? the Youth was going6 lines
- By whispering in the Ear.7 lines
- Cjold is the covering of that stately place.11 lines
- Come Sleep, O Sleep! The Certain Knot Of Peace14 lines
- Door.23 lines
- Ewe fit for a bowe to be made on.18 lines
- I.7 lines
- If I a Fancy take4 lines
- If Man might know7 lines
- II.4 lines
- Iliados. 4.4 lines
- INTRODUCTION.77 lines
- It would have spoil'd him surely.5 lines
- JOHN WILMOT, EARL OF ROCHESTER10 lines
- Love and Debt alike6 lines
- Love turn'd to Hatred15 lines
- My verie inke tumes straight to Stella's name ; ]6 lines
- Nor half so full of Juice.5 lines
- Not by Amphialus.10 lines
- Odysse. 21.28 lines
- One Sigh imprison'd ruins more20 lines
- Phi. What handlyng is proper to the Instrumentes?39 lines
- Phi. Wherin standeth well handlynge of thynges?4 lines
- PUBLI6HCR14 lines
- ROGER ASCHAM29 lines
- Sir Charles Sedley17 lines
- So must Bread too ; but since there are enough22 lines
- Song from Arcadia14 lines
- Sonnet III: With how sad steps14 lines
- Sonnet VII: When Nature14 lines
- Sonnet XLI: Having This Day My Horse14 lines
- Sonnet XVI: In Nature Apt14 lines
- Sonnet XVII: His Mother Dear Cupid14 lines
- Sonnet XXX: Whether the Turkish New Moon14 lines
- Sonnet XXXI: With How Sad Steps, O Moon14 lines
- Sonnet XXXI: With How Sad Steps, O Moon14 lines
- SPECIAL INTRODUCTION90 lines
- Than on the Sun in July.5 lines
- That crowns our Love with Pleasures : these are19 lines
- That Love and Folly were in Hell.9 lines
- That Piece of Beauty passes ?14 lines
- That Plato I read for nought but if he tame10 lines
- That their chief Art in Reign Dissembling is.5 lines
- The -Lady Penelope Devereux was married to my118 lines
- The Business of the Kitchen's great6 lines
- The Careless Lover5 lines
- THE CONSOLATIONS OF PHILOSOPHY32 lines
- The notes give all such variations in the earlier14 lines
- THE SCHOOLB OF SHOOTYNGE 3940 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OF SHOOTYNGE 2940 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OF SHOOTYNGE 4340 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OF SHOOTYNGE 4540 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OF SHOOTYNGE 4740 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OF SHOOTYNGE 4982 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OF SHOOTYNGE 5339 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OP SHOOTYNGE 3140 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OP SHOOTYNGE 3321 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OP SHOOTYNGE 3540 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OP SHOOTYNGE 3740 lines
- THE SCHOOLE OP SHOOTYNGE 5140 lines
- The Table-Talk12 lines
- The wisest scholler of the wight most wise14 lines
- There himselfe with his shot he close doth lay.7 lines
- This much premised we begin to turn over the10 lines
- Thy greefe more then death would grieve me.57 lines
- To a Lady who forbade to13 lines
- To keepe the place of their first loving state6 lines
- To make those sufferings dear4 lines
- To The Sad Moon14 lines
- Tox. Dyvers countryes and tymes have used alwayes19 lines
- Tox. Shotinge streyght and kepynge of a lengthe.12 lines
- Transcriber’s Note14 lines
- V.20 lines
- VI.20 lines
- VIIL21 lines
- VIT.16 lines
- What Rack can Fancy find so high ?12 lines
- With Bridget and with Nell.14 lines
- X INTRODUCTION.84 lines
- X.18 lines
- XI.15 lines
- XII.17 lines
- XIII.30 lines
- XIX.6 lines
- XVI.18 lines
- XVII.6 lines
- XVIII.14 lines
- XXI.8 lines
- XXII.7 lines
- XXIII.11 lines
- XXIV.19 lines
- XXVI. ^V11 lines
- XXVII.18 lines
- Yet each prepared with fumes wel-shading grace7 lines
- You that with Allegorie's curious frame \16 lines
